1 / 46

Wednesday, May 28 th , 2014 2:00-3:00 PM ET Audience: All WIC Agencies

Wednesday, May 28 th , 2014 2:00-3:00 PM ET Audience: All WIC Agencies. The VENA Journey in Massachusetts—From Theory to Practice Lynn Beattie, MPH, LDN, CLC Rachel Colchamiro, MPH, RD, LDN, CLC Corey Greene, CLC. Massachusetts WIC. Serving ~ 125,000 participants monthly

amery-floyd
Download Presentation

Wednesday, May 28 th , 2014 2:00-3:00 PM ET Audience: All WIC Agencies

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Wednesday, May 28th, 2014 2:00-3:00 PM ET Audience: All WIC Agencies

  2. The VENA Journey in Massachusetts—From Theory to Practice Lynn Beattie, MPH, LDN, CLC Rachel Colchamiro, MPH, RD, LDN, CLC Corey Greene, CLC

  3. Massachusetts WIC • Serving ~125,000 participants monthly • 35 local agencies providing services at 120 sites • 39% Hispanic • 22% Black, 6% Asian/ Pacific, <1% Native American, <1% Native Hawaiian/Other Pacific, 67% White and 3% Multiple Race • 1,000 vendors (grocery stores and pharmacies) • ~600 staff including peer counselors; paraprofessional model

  4. Changing Our Ways Traditional approach to nutrition services… • Step by step, sequential • Logic and fact based • Deficiency oriented • Tells people what to do… WAS NOT WORKING! • Not relevant or “connecting” • Doesn’t capture participants’ attention or lead to positive behavior change • Lecturing and making people feel deficient (bad mom)

  5. Touching Hearts, Touching Minds2003 WIC Special Project Grant • Developed materials that created a relevant benefit to changing behaviors • Improved nutrition staff counseling skills • New emotion-based style • Open, Dig, Connect, Act conversational approach • Rolled out statewide in 2007: • Revisions to certain Management Evaluation components to reflect new emotion-based services • Implemented VENA

  6. A VENA for Massachusetts Getting to the Heart of the Matter This project and its tools were created to foster a genuine connection between participant and counselor and becomes a powerful springboard to effective nutrition education, using emotion-based techniques that make people feel understood and respected.

  7. Getting to the Heart of the Matter2007 WIC Special Projects Grant Three goals: • Identify changes needed to current assessment process to achieve an emotion-based, participant-centered interaction • Develop and implement emotion-based nutrition assessment tools and techniques • Supportive of VENA principles • Provides structure for parents to identify hopes and dreams for their child or themselves • Connect emotion-based desires (‘pulse points’) with eating and activity behaviors • Deliver materials and training that combines VENA principles and emotion-based techniques

  8. Getting to the Heart of the MatterTimeline • 2008 • Ethnographic Research • Focus Groups (participant and staff) • Pre-Pilot Surveys • 2009 • Pilot emotion-based assessment tools and techniques • 2010 • Post-Pilot Surveys • In-Depth Staff Interviews • Ethnographic Research • Focus Groups • Final Strategies and Techniques • 2011 • Statewide Training and Website development • Task Force launch • 2012-now • On-going “refresher” trainings, task forces, technical assistance and support • Integrated into new staff training

  9. Getting to the Heart of the Matter Pilot • 6 local programs: Berkshire South, Chelsea/ Revere, Dorchester North, Holyoke/ Chicopee, North Suburban and Springfield North • Piloted for close to 2 years • What pilots said: • “I feel that the tools have helped get to the heart of the matter, much quicker, instead of tip-toeing around or dancing around. And I feel like it makes it more interesting for us, the nutritionist, and for the patient, because it‘s something new.” • “With the VENA [form], it‘s like the same old questions. But with the tools, it‘s more like...the participant can tell you whatever they want.”

  10. Baby Book

  11. Baby Book In addition to helping parents keep track of important events in their child's life, the WIC Baby Book can serve as a unique nutrition and activity assessment. The pages include topics such as feeding plans, maternal diet and physical activity, breastfeeding and introduction of solids. Some mothers might prefer to complete the baby book at home. The baby book prompts can be a useful tool even when the answers have not yet been recorded. Acknowledge the mother's preference and proceed to ask how she plans to respond to each prompt, using her answers as a jumping off point for the assessment.

  12. Card Sort & Your List

  13. Card Sort & Your List Card Sort: Ask the participant to quickly sort through the cards, grouping them into one of three piles: “things going well," “things going so-so" and “things going not so well." The sorting takes less than a minute. The nutritionist can quickly praise mom for “things going well”, then review the “items not going so well" pile, asking questions to determine which topics are of greatest interest or need, and focusing the conversation on those topics. Your List: The tool can be given by the Program Assistant to clients when they check into their WIC appointments or by nutrition staff during their nutrition appointments. Clients are asked to identify topics of interest or concern. There are also places for them to identify unique concerns that aren't on the list.

  14. Metaphor Images

  15. Metaphor Images Place the metaphor images where the participant can see all of them. Ask participant to select an image that says something about how they feel about a nutrition topic. (How their child is eating, weight gain during pregnancy, etc.) Ask: "What does that image say about how you feel about (topic)?" Use feelings as a springboard to an amazing conversation, wrapping suggested behavior change ideas in with emotions.

  16. Doors

  17. Doors • Lay out the "Hopes and Dreams Doors" so participants can easily see them. • Tell participants that these doors are special because they represent the hopes and dreams of all mothers (parents) around the world. • Ask participants to select a door that says something to them about their hopes and dreams (regarding health topics). • Ask client to "open the door" and share what's behind their hopes and dreams door for their children and family. • Listen carefully so you can connect the their feelings with nutrition-related behaviors. Use phrases like these: • Is there anything we could talk about today related to your child's eating that keeps you from feeling like the mom you always hoped you would be?

  18. Magic Wand

  19. Magic Wand The Magic Wand tool allows parents to step out of their daily realities and imagine magical powers. When they use this tool, you will be able to quickly identify change opportunities to discuss during their WIC visit. Display the Magic Wand to the parents, telling the mom that the Magic Wand has the ability to transform everyday eating challenges. If she were to wave the wand, ask her to tell you about the eating challenges she would change first. Proceed to discuss "magical" actions the mother could take to transform her daily challenges.

  20. Hedonic Scale • A hedonic scale was introduced as another tool staff could use as a ‘jumping off point’.

  21. Hedonic Scale The Hedonic Scale tool allows clients to quickly circle emotion-based faces that convey how they feel about a wide variety of topics, such as eating patterns, activity, health and growth. They also allow parents to suggest how they feel about more sensitive topics like food insecurity and their roles as parents. Address positive responses first and recognize the successes. Probe and ask questions like: “what could change to make your response a very happy face?” Feeling Faces

  22. Pilot Implementation Tips • It may not always be appropriate to use a tool • Documentation of what tools are used help reduce repetition • New tools keep the concept fresh • Start first with tools you feel most comfortable with • Frame it in a way that makes it obvious that you are talking about nutrition and health topics • Try starting with children re-certs. • Try ‘expert of the month or week’ • Practice, practice, practice!

  23. Getting to the Heart of the Matter Pilot Results Focus groups and surveys reveal that participants love WIC • “I’m more looking forward to see the nutritionist, because I’m waiting for... to hear, ‘Oh, there’s been changes. Oh, your son is growin’, it seems like he’s gaining weight.’ And she seems to acknowledge, because... she’s relating to me…she was able to visually and written, connect with my issues with my son. I’m looking forward to seeing her, because I know that I I’m gonna get some feedback, positive feedback, or if there’s some concerns, she’ll let me know how to address them. And before, I never cared.”

  24. GHM Evaluation: Summary • Surveys: >95% of pre-test responses were positive for staff and participants at intervention and control sites • Maintained in post-test surveys • Could reflect other MA WIC Program activities in study period: THTM, VENA, Food package changes • Qualitative findings • Participants: Importance of ongoing relationship with nutritionist and continuity of information in communicating concerns and following nutrition advice • WIC staff: GHM tools and techniques increase participants’ confidence, comfort and satisfaction; change structure and content of counseling; increase staff connection with clients. Training and feedback essential.

  25. Post-Pilot Ethnographic Research • Less reliance on computers during assessment • Positive changes in body language • Balance of control of the conversation between educator and client • Counseling and assessment more informal and relaxed • Clients sharing more concerns and questions • Some clinic environment changes • More positive and warmer customer service • Eye contact between the educator and client made the conversation more relaxed and enjoyable • Clients value nutrition information provided during WIC counseling sessions; WIC educators may have a limited perception of their potential influence with clients

  26. Lessons Learned • GHM provides tools to move staff towards VENA, but does not stand alone; Constant support, mentoring and training is needed to create and sustain change • Staff and participants approach new concepts with varied levels of comfort and willingness to experiment; techniques need to be attempted multiple times to determine success • Identifying a champion in each local agency is key • New tools can become old over time; need for continual introduction of new elements • Open conversation can be overwhelming for staff, especially when sensitive topics outside of nutrition expertise are raised

  27. Getting to the Heart of the Matter Local Program Perspective

  28. Training Website • Created an on-line version of all project products to be distributed and shared on www.gettingtotheheartofthematter.com • Includes an overview of the emotion-based services, guidance for implementation, training tools and printable versions of materials or order information. • Provides on-going support

  29. Getting to the Heart of the MatterMoving Forward • Getting to the Heart of the Matter/Counseling Task Force meets quarterly for technical assistance on the tools and techniques. • Task force members play a vital role in creating new tools to keep the concept fresh. These tools are field tested with participants and adapted before development for all local programs. • Task force discusses other counseling topics that are relevant and pertinent to the on-going support of VENA.

  30. Getting to the Heart of the MatterNew Tool The Activities Photos and Calendar tool is used to identify what types of healthy activities parents are currently doing with their children and what new actions they would like to try to add to their lifestyle. After choosing an activity, parents are given a calendar. Each time they are able to do the activity (going to park for physical activity, eating together as a family, etc.), the child can put the sticker on the calendar to keep track and feel proud of their accomplishments each week.

  31. VENA after Getting to the Heart of the Matter • After roll out, on-going refresher trainings have been offered on VENA concepts on a regular basis. • All Touching Hearts, Touching Minds and Getting to the Heart of the Matter content has been integrated into new staff training for new nutrition staff and paraprofessionals. • Various task forces work together to keep nutrition education materials and tools fresh and emotion-based. • Counseling, nutrition assessment and documentation trainings are offered to ensure comfort with nutrition service standards. • Group education trainings are offered to train staff on facilitating successful groups for WIC parents.

  32. VENA Training Strategies Painting a Picture- OARS Brings a Picture to Life

  33. VENA Training Strategies The First Stroke In order to get someone to listen and take your advice you must: • Establish a relationship. • Build trust. • Connect. Think about: • How participants are greeted • Clinic environment • Phone contact • Screening charts/ previous plan

  34. VENA Training Strategies Using Open Ended Questions/Individualized Conversation If we use the diet questionnaire the same way each time and try to complete it much like a checklist, we will miss some valuable information and its purpose gets lost. Participants’ Perspectives on the Old Way “That’s how they get I think the packages, you know, that they give on the checks.” “They ask just to see if the food they’ve been providing —if she eats it— if there is any way to make it better.”

  35. VENA Training Strategies Affirmation

  36. VENA Training Strategies Reflective Listening

  37. VENA Training Strategies Summarizing

  38. VENA Training Strategies What is a complete assessment? One that not only gathers all of the necessary information in the nutrition session, but flows and encourages someone want to take action towards a healthy behavior change The next step should be obvious to the nutrition educator and participant

  39. Bringing VENA Back to the Clinic • Explore options to juggle VENA with Eos (WIC MIS) requirements • Notebook • Asking critical questions after a rapport has been built or during other routine data collection • Turn computer and involve participant in data collection • Focus on the interaction/conversation • Be okay with silence • Don’t focus on looking for a problem—focus on what is important to the participant • Listen more, talk less • Relax and enjoy the appointment

  40. VENA and the ManagementEvaluation • Dietary intake is adequately collected and assessed using VENA techniques. • Nutrition counseling and information is appropriate for participant’s needs, interests and risk. • Counselor utilizes nutrition education materials and tools appropriately, giving consideration to the participant’s culture, literacy level, and language. • Nutrition counseling is individualized and participant-led; nutrition staff uses emotion-based/VENA techniques to provide nutrition education, set goals (focus points), and summarize the counseling appropriately.

  41. Components of a CompleteVENA Nutrition Assessment • Conveys a good overall picture of dietary intake, including typical consumption patterns from the five food groups • Collected using open-ended questions, affirmations, reflective listening and summarization • Identifies concerns raised by participant • Identifies positive components of participant’s diet, as well as concerns of nutrition staff • Provides reasoning for assigned dietary risks • Documented in the diet questionnaire or the Subjective portion of the Care Plan • Provides sufficient information for other nutrition staff to provide follow-up care

  42. Challenges • Documentation • MIS system flexibility/requirements • Uncovering sensitive issues • Expectations of paraprofessionals

  43. VENA in MA Now Local Program Perspective

  44. MA WIC Contacts & Resources Rachel Colchamiro rachel.colchamiro@state.ma.us or 617-624-6153 Lynn Beattie lynn.beattie@state.ma.us or 617-624-6158 Corey Greene crgreene@mgh.harvard.edu www.touchingheartstouchingminds.com www.gettingtotheheartofthematter.com www.mass.gov/wic

  45. Additional Questions • If you have additional questions about the Massachusetts VENA project, please contact: Lynn Beattie, MPH, LDN, CLC Lynn.beattie@state.ma.usor 617-624-6158 • If you have questions about VENA in general please contact your respective FNS Regional office.

  46. Thank you! • Thank you for your participation. • Thank you for your hard work. • Stay tuned for the next webinar.

More Related